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ROOSEVELT’S M SELFISH.
SM HEARST IN INTERVIEW
ON THIRD Pm MOVEMENT
“Many Democrats Believe His Main
Object Is to Break the Republican
Organization, So He Can Gain Con
trol and Be Its Candidate in 1916.”
•pecial Cable to The Georgian.
LONDON, Sept In The London
Evening: Standard publishes the
following
Mr. William Randolph Hearst
the well known Atnetlcan news
paper proprietor, in a special in
terview given tn one of out rep
resentatives today, made a critical
analysis of the unprecedented po
litical situation in the United
States, and in discussing the
chances of the candidates in the
race for the presidency showed
how Dr Woodtow Wilson would,
in all likelihood, he Mr Taft’s
successor.
In doing an. Mr. Hearst ex
pressed the opinion that the now
party movement would not he suc
cosxful until the progressive wings,
both of the Democi'atic and Repub
lican parties, combined and formed
an independent party of consoli
dated progressives. This united
progressive party. Mt Hearst be
lieves. would succeed and w ould
exercise a potent influence on the
future of American politics
"It seems to me." began Mr
Hearst "that the report cabled
from New York that, in view of
the result of the Vermont state
election Mr. Taft and Mr. Roose
velt may retire from the presiden
tial contest in favor of a man
agreeable to both factions, is an
entirely irresponsible suggestion.
If it means anything defined. It
probably means that a good many
important Republicans would iikt
to see both Mr. Taft and Mr.
Roosevelt retire in favor of some
third person but I don't think
there is the slightest possibility of
such a thing happening
"The Independent movement in
the United States Is a real and
powerful force. It began with the
Independence league In New York
and developed strongly in various
sections of the country In New
York and adjacent states in New
England- Vermont being a New
England state - In the middle West,
with Chicago as a nucleus, and
In the fat W est, particularly in the
state of California, it attained
great strength. In those stales
and sections 1 bad newspapers and
was able to give amide publicity to
the propaganda of th third party
movement.
"As a result of this education
and agitation and d< ve opment, the
third party's strength has in
creased immensely in the last four
years. Four years ago the Inde
pendence league had t candidate
for president, and, though it actu
ally carried no single state, it ex
hibited strength and vitality In
tnanv sections of the country. To
day the pt inci ph a of i his third pa r- _
ty movement are more widely
known and mote generally in
dorsed than four years ago. the
organization of the movement is
much better and the enthusiasm of
i the supporters of the movement is,
as great as ever.
"Mr. Roosevelt undoubtedly r<al-
Ized'the extent and importance of
the third patty sentiment, and
when be was defeated for the Re
publican num nation at Chicago he
at once offe i d himself .is the
leader of this third party move
ment. He was gladly accepted as
the leader on account of hi- vig
orous personality and because of
the strength of his fol'owing in
the tadica! wing of the Republican
party, also because the import
ance of the thlfd party movement
would be greatly increased under
the leadership of a man who had
tw ice been pi • sident of the I'nited
States
“Mr. Roosevelt adopted in their
entirety the principles which the
third party advanced and subtract
ed little or nothing from th.- na
tional platform of the Independ
ence party adopted at Chicago in
ISOS.
"The advocates of this third
party movement are enthuiasts.
They believe absolutely in the ne
cessity of a third party to tree
the country from the corrupt con
trol of both of the old parties
They believe that bub of the old
parties ate in the grip of the priv
ileged interests, and that the
stranglehold of the special in
terests can not be broken They
also believe that there is no desire
on the part of the leaders of the
old parties to terminate this as
sociation with the privileged in
terests, as it is a profitable associa
tion and enables these to seeui<
large campaign contributions, as
has been shown in the Standard
Oil letters, and -o to finance and
. operate theit machine and pa ty
orga nizatkms
"The till'd party supporteis be
lieve ardently in thelt piogram.
tin main purpose of which i« to
The Atlanta Georgian—Premium Coupon
Th s coupon w 0 tte »ecented at our urn Parlor. 20 Eaat Alabama at.,
I as part a 1 payment for any of the beaut ful premium goods displayed there.
i See Premiun Parlor Announcement on Another
■n..e he ( .uno of government
out of the hands of party ma
chines an.d privileged interests
and restore it to the hands of the
people. Nearly ar the measures
of the third party platform are
aimed directly at that end.
"You will see, therefore, how
impossible it is for that third
pa ly to unite with the Republi
can party, for the platform of
the national Republican party is.
conservative in the extreme ant
the Republican party is regarded
as the chief reactionary party in
the United States
"Then again the proposal of
Mr. Roosevelt and Mr. Taft both
' etiring was brought up at the
Republican convention in Chi
cago. Neither one was trilling to
retire. I can not believe that
either on< is willing to retire
now or that a fusion between
these two diametrically < onfiict
ing factions can be satisfactorily
accomplished. ev<-n if both candi
dates should retire.
"Os course, if the division in the
Republican party continues, the
probabilities ire ilia! Mr Wilson
will he elected, or that failing an
actual majority, the election will be
thrown into the house of represen
tatives. The Vermont election
) shows not only no deflection from
the Democratic party, but a slight
gain for it. This Is significant.
"The Progressive sentiment in
the I'nited States is tremendous.
The mtn who class themselves as
progn ssfves, no matter to yvhat
party they belong, constitute a con
siderable majority of the voters of
the United States There are prob
ably too. more progressive Demo
crats than there are progressive Re
publicans, and. finally, the Demo
cratic platform was so vague ami
indefinite as to fall far short of ex
pressing tne sentiments of the pro
gressive Democrats.
"To a Democratic platform of
milk and water. Mr. Wilson, lit his
fitter of acceptance, meiely addud
more* yvatei bubbling water, spar
kling with euphonious phrases,
agreeably charged with gas. but
nevertheless water, This situation
In tlo Democratic patty must tie a
disappointment to militant pru-
"Why. then, is there not a nota
ble deflectlofi from the Democratic
patty to the new third party " Be
cause .Mi Roosevelt committed the
distinct error of making this third
pat ty movement almost entirely Re-*
publican, recruiting It almost en■
tirely trom the progressive wing of
ihe Republican party and offit e,-
ing it with Republican officehold
ers.
•Mr Roosevelt, being a Repub
lican. should have had a Democrat,
and preferably a Southern Demo
crat, for vice president, and if
Roosevelt had been as anxious to
unite the progressives as he was to
disrupt the Republicans he would
have had a Democrat on the ticket.
Hut .Mr, Roosevelt, the candi
date for president, is a Republican;
Mr Johnson, the candidate for vice
president, is a Republican Nearly
nil the leaders and speakers foi the
thud party in this campaign are
Repub tea n■. Th< refot e, I believe
Lie third party movement will only
hail succeed in this campaign
"This agitation will go far. how
evei to establish a third party, anti
the carrying of certain states by
[he third party will give added
hopes and confidence Im the sup
porters of the ‘Progressive move
ment In my opinion, the third
party movement will not be suc
* 1 esyjful until the progressives of rhe
fii publican party and the progres
sives of the Democratic party are
united in one third party.
Tlie Democrats who know Mr
R " seve.t am) understand his per
son., ambitions and rather selfish
ln,e . n ’ •’.< i. y e that Mr Rooae
'' ' s main object at present. ;• to
"re ik up th< Republican organfza
ilon. so that he can gain control of
11 and dominate the Republican
party and be its candidate for
preMllent in 1916.
Therefore." added Mr. Hearst,
'many trdent progressive Demo
■ :<[s ~i. supporting Mr. Wilson
.mat as I am not because they be
•ic m the teeb'e professions of
tile Demoetaile platform, nor be
‘ '"S' h< y bellevt that Mr. Wi son
oiic. in office nn,l driven by the
powerlu progressive sentiment! in
tile Demo, ratio party will be com
peted to become tar more prugres
si'e t in lie now promises to be.
and also because they believe that
Mr. RoosevUt's leadership is de
priving the third patty movement
of its non-partisan charactei
"Democratic progressives have.
" r. plainly failed to support
w third party movement this year,
ami they have failed to support It
’ believe tha t Mr
Rooscve.t is making of it merely a
medium for the control of the m.t
--• <iin» ! \ of ope of the old parties*,
an 1 brt.iiN. thet think that Mr.
Roos* veil '' leadership as a whole
im.N b» ♦ n and more partisan
’ *» ; :«■« \ u. n n s» ti»a than
I '
THE ATLANTA GEORGIAN AND NEWS. TUESDAY. SEPTEMBER 10. 1912.
All Atlanta Home Again From Mountain and Seashore
BAGGAGE RECORDS BROKEN
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A pretty hohteeoiimr at the Tuion station and just a ft-tv of the trunks the haifgage men
are wrestlinir witn these tla\s as the last vacationists hurrv back to Atlanta.
African Ruler a Graduate of Two U.S. Colleges
KING VISITS IN SAVANNAH
SAVANNAH. GA.. Sept. 10. Savan
nah is the host of one of tlie rulers of
the earth. He is t hies Pela Penick,
soverilgn over five ini'lkm dusky and
untaught savage- in darkest Africa. H>
is as blai k as a starless night in his o«n
unpenetrable jungles. Only son of King
Hunnah. hereditary chief and ruler of
Farjait. in West Central Africa, there
flows In Chief Pelt's Veins the pure
strain of savage royalty, as untainted
as it was thousands of years ago.
Whin t hies Pein was but eight years
old his father died. and. being then too
young to ascend the throne. Pela was
taken by his uncle, an ivory trader, to
the west coast. There he came under
the notice of Bishop Penick, of the
Episcopal church. who later brought
him to the I’nited States. Endowed
with unusual intelligence, Pela Penick
as he elected to be called, entered Sto
rer college. We.-t Virginia, vv here he
graduated with honors, afterward going
to the theological school of Howard
university, Washington. I>. (’. from
which he received his degree in 1906.
CITIES FACE FAMINE
OF MILK WHEN HEAT
DRIES UP PASTURES
St LOUIS. Bi).. Sept. 10 Every city
In the I'nited States faces a milk famine
that will occur within the next week
unless the hot wav. passes, according
to local wholesale milk dealers. At
present St. l ouis, Kansas City. Chicago,
all the towns through Missouri. Illinois
and lowa, and practically the entire
country, is receiving but one-half of the
amount of milk usuallv shipped by
farmers and it is feared that within a
week there will be no milk with which
to supply the trade.
St Louis daily firms ate not making
butter at present and some of the com
panies are manufacturing their ice
eream from condensed or sterilized
cream.
<)n the farms the heat has scorched
the grass so that the cows are left with
out proper food foi tin pi eduction of
milk.
TOO COOL FOR BEER AND
TOO WARM FOR WHISKY
NEW YORK Sept lit. Twas a lit
tie too warm for whisky and a little
too coo so brer" m the last sx
months of 191',. and the forepart of
1912. said a statement issued todav bv
the 1 nited States Brewers asso-'ia
• tfon
It s.cs that was whv bee' sees fell
»»» ’.105.21S ’.urn:*. <u I LS per cent.
ir the tisca v, , ending June 30.
Since that time he has devoted himsel:
to missionary work.
Recently Pela Penick lifts received
letters from his tribal chiefs in Farjah
urging him to return ami occupy the
throne of his father. These letters,
written in Arabic, were brought to
Monrovia, Liberia, by runners frofli
Farjah, th<- bearers traveling hundreds
of miles through trackless jungles to
reach the west toast city. Chief Pein's
country is in the very heart of the dark
continent He says he is the only man
of all his 5,000.000 people who is a
i Christian.
, it Is his plan to return to Farjah.
i but he will not take up the scepter of
, his father. Instead, he proposes to ab
• dicate in favor of his uncle, and to es
. tablish a great educational institution
similar to that at Tuskegee. Ala.
I "My people arc ready foi civiliza
tion." he sa.vs. "I want to teach
. to build bonus, to till the soil, to be
» come * hristians and to become tgood
, citizens. That shall bo mv life work."
i'hiet Pela lectured hist night at th-*
First African Baptist chuich. on invi
-1 tation of its pastor, the Rev. Daniel
Wright.
CONNORS SETS ’EM UP.
AND STRIKING DOCK
> LABORERS ARE BACK
MILWAUKEE, Sept.lo. Iphree hun
dred ami silty dock laborers returned
to work after a short-lived strike that
ended when W J. (Fingyl Conners
of Buffalo, bought a drink for all the
workers who could crowd about the
three kegs of cool beer which he or
dered.
Conners himself drained a big marine
district schooner anti promts d to give
the men th. things they demanded. The
iemands included belle - sanitarv con
ditions in lite warehouses anil full pay
for time spent waiting for vessels to
be shifted and freight cars switched.
McGEE WILL CRITICISES
WASTE OF CEMETERIES
WASHINGTON Sept Hl. In be
queathing his bodv to science. Dr \V
J. McGee eminent Federal anthropolo- I
gist, who died here Wednesday, criti
cises "shocking economic waste repre
sented by the cities of the dead in
long-settled communities' in his will
just tiled.
PARTY AROUSES GIRL
AND SAVES HER LIFE
BR< if 'KI.Y N Sept Hl. HI! i.i i
S. hmodec declared to be -Icing, fo'- '
lowing an operation, wi.l t,,..
cause a nurse, a- a ast ic.-o t string -1
I"' ’’ flow • ! - t li.H .1 i "Used th.
girl from het li'-tlcssm .-s.
. Railroad Employees Kept Hus-1
tling by Rush—School Open- i
ing Closes Vacation.
Trunks piled to the .ceiling of the 1
bagg.ig' room, leaving allies so nar
row a fat man could not pass through:
rumbling, trucks bringing- a dozen more
so. the snick; the great elevator creak
ing up with a heavy' load; more trucks
be-id • the tracks, below with .negroes
snatching baggage f.om the train just
arrived: wagons clattering up the sta- |
• lion and bearing away cargoes which
I make the homes strain at their collars;
» ■
■i ho-de of men and women, dusty from |
the train and tanned nark brown from
exposure clamoring to be waited on.
That's the scene at nve Terminal sta
tion these first days of September.
"De mo’ dey come, de vvuss dey git.
My back's done broke smashin' bag
gag grumbled Eph Wiggins, one of
the husky roustabouts. "Hit looks to
me like eve'ybody in Gavvgy done tuk it
notion to come home f'um de springs
de same day.”
Baggage Records Broken.
Su e.y all Atlanta has been away on
a vacation, to judge from the scenes at.
the station. The trains have been
bringing them home forth - past ten
days in such number that extra cars
have been required to transport them.
The Terminal station has handled
from 3.U00 to 4,00(i pieces of incoming
baggage a day. One train from the
East brought in 900 pieces-a day or two
ago.
"It's the opening of school.” said the
veteran baggageman. "Everybody
wanted to get home in time to buy the
kids some n- v. duds and send them off
to school todav. Most everybody's back
now."
He stopped to explain to a pretty
gi I with a bag of golf clubs that the
big trunk with R. A. J. in white letters
on the end really had not come in.
Then he insisted that the three trunks
and a bird eage for ITnpsty-Stecn
West Peachtree had started on their
wav two hours before.
“Folk- are unreasonable,”, he con
| tinned. "Thcv can't expect the trans
f - - mpanies to keep enough teams
and wagons to handle the traffic in an
hour when a rush like this is on.
There’s bound to be some delay.
Biggest Season Ever.
"it's the biggest season we ever ha' l .
Atlanta folks must be prosperous from
thi way they're traveling this yen’.
They're going East to the fashionable
resoits and out to the far- Northwest
in the fishing country. There are a lot
of trunks coming In with European la
bels on them, too."
Then he turned to the telephone to
• xplaiti that the truck with check No.
44228 was not in the place and that he
was sorry the hat had been smashed in
ihe other trunk. He wiped a fevered
brow as he hung up the receiver.
I "Thank goodness, it's nearly over."
|he remarked. "We’ll , have a rest for
awhile" *'
SHE LANDS 240-LB. FISH
AFTER FOUR-HOUR FIGHT
AVALON. <"AL.. Sept. in. Mr- I’ S.
''Mara. es Salt Lake City, hooked a
sword lisn weighing 240 pounds on
'lent tackle, .mil landed he: , it. t aft
er a fight that lasted four hours.
SIGNER OF DECLARATION
OF INDEPENDENCE SUED
WASHINGTON. S- pt. 10. "Charles
<’a rollton,” signer of the
Declaration of Independence, and- his i
unknown heirs ae macle defendants in!
a lawsuit to quit title t-- propvrtv here. |
•
WILSON LINES OP
FOR PORE FOOD
onoN
Governor Also Attacks Tariff
Again in Series of Speeches
in New York.
I NEW YORK. Sept. 10. It was a
, bu.-y day for Goveinor Woodrow Wil
son. The Democratic presidential nom
inee attended a pure food conference
at the Colony club, the most exclusive
women's organization in New York,
where he delivered a rpeeeh promising
to make pure food a live campaign is
sue; opeYied the Democratic tariff ex-"
nibition at 19 Union square with /i
■ speech on the tariff: delivered another
address on the same subject in the open
| air in Union square, conferred with a
number of national leaders at national
hcadqua: tors upon his future speaking
program, and delivered a long tariff ad
dress before the New York Press club.
At the tariff exhibit Governor Wilson
advanced the new thought that Ameri
can manufacturers in demanding a high
tariff barrier for their own protection
are really taxing themselves. . This puts
. Inited Slates industries at a disadvan
tage in try ing to compete in the world’s
markets abroad’, he said.
i- are pampering our industries."
said the presidential nominee, "and we
are pampering them at the very time
they should be getting free. American
industry is now in a strait-jacket, and
what we are fighting for in behalf of in
dustry is freedom."
It is mortifying. Governor Wilson
said, that a tariff exhibit should be
necessary. Such an object lesson, the
speaker declared, is like sending grow n
ups to the kindergarten. The governor
continued his attack by saying that the
manufactu; ers were really- robbing
themselves. He pointed out that a sew
ing machine may be purchased in Me,x
--i o for SlB that costs S3O here.
"How much greater.” he cried, "would
the market for thes ■ machines be if
they were sold for $lB here as well as
in Mexico.”
In his Press club address the gov
ernor assailed the Republican party,
and the impotency of the
new Progressive party.
Spokesman for the People.
The governor said, in part:
"I have come here for the purpose of
discussing just as candidly as possible the
political situation, and 1 hope that in
doing so I shall do injustice- to no one.
1 am not one of those who believe that
: he light tactics in politics is to depreciate
the men you are opposed to and to belittle
and misrepresent the forces w;ith which
you have to content. It ought to be a
I Hank, straightforward and fair determi
! nation of what it is we are to agree upon
land <lo, and how we are to do it in the
| great field of our common action.
I "My feeling about my own candidacy
for the presidency is that if 1 can not
be the people’s spokesman 1 don't want to
feci, if I am elected to the office of pres
ident. that I am speaking the purposes
and impulses anil judgment of the people
of the United States. We are not; we are
not politicians. We <lo not live our lives
at the polls. We ar.e interested in poli
tics only as it is a means of adjusting
the law to serve our life as it should be
served.
I want to discuss the three tiarties
now seeking your support. I know there
are more than three parties in the United
States, and it is not out of any disre
spect to the parties that have com
manded only a small number of votes In
the past that I leave them out of the
reckoning for the present.
Afraid of Man Who Doesn't Know.
"Let us consider, first-, the Republican
party. There is a great deal of differ
ence between the Republican party and
certain groups of gentlemen who have
been allowed to lead and direct the Re
publican party. Tne Republican party, as
represented by- these men, is the very
party which has got us into the difficulties
we are now trying to get out of.
"•Mark you, I am not saying that the
leaders of the party knew that they
were doing us an evil or that they in
tended to do us an evil, [•’or my part. I
am very much more afraid of the man
who does a bad thing and does not know
it is bad than of the man who does a
bad tiling and knows it is bad, because 1
think that in public affairs stupidity
is more dangerous I han knavery, because
harder to fight and dislodge. These gen
tlemen. whatever may have been their in
tentions. linked the government of the
United States with the men who control
the big finances of the United States.
They may have done it innocently, or they
may have done it corruptly.
"Here is the old question of compaign
funds: if I take a hundred thousand dol
lars from a group of men representing a
particular interest that lias a big stake in
a certain schedule of the tariff, I take" it
with the knowledge that those gentlemen
will expect me not to forget their in
[ terest in that schedule and that they will
take it as a point of implicit honor that I
should see to it that they were not
damaged by too great a change in that
schedule. . Therefore, if 1 take their
money. 1 ant bound to them by a sort
of tacit pledge of honor, and if I desert
them I change the whole character of the
government. •
The Men He's Interested tn.
"The men I am interested in are the
men who never have their voices heard,
who never get a line in the newspapers’
who never gel a moment on the plat
form. who never have access to the ears
of governors or of anybody who is re
sponsible lor the conduct of government,
but who go silently and patiently to their
work every day carrying the burden of
the World How are they to be under
stood by the masters of finance if only the
masters of finance are consulted? The
masters of finance ought to be consulted,
because they are a part of the people
of the United States, but they ought to
be e. nsulted only in proportion as they
ate part of the people of the United
States.
"There is a large bods of Republicans
I now in open rebellion. And what inter
| ests me about them and draws me to
them is that the.' are in revolt because
their conscieni i s could not stands what !
. was going op. (hat third party de.sprve* '
I ' our careful consideration when you are I
debating the question which partv -.o u
arc going to support. I would be ashamed
|of myaclt a 1 did nut realize and admit
that soqpe of the sober and finer forces
of this country are now devoted to th«
promotion of this new movement and
party, j have known the insurgent Re
publicans a long time.
"If this new party is preferred on tie
fifth of November, will it be in a po •
tion to clear the decks and earrv out the
policy which many noble gentlemen ha-,
conceived that it was sincerelv bent up,,.
Politics now at least is intensely pra
ttcal and real. \Ve can not afford to
on the sth of November and then w , •
another four years. The process of re
form in this country must take pla. ..
within the next four years. If the leadcr
of the third party is made president what
; Will be his situation? Does anybody sup.
pose that he will have a third partv .
gress behind him" Is it not inevitai -’
that in such an event there will he
congress such a mixture of elements and
groups and coteries that the president
can not possibly get any program what
ever put through"
Queer Jumbles in Congress.
\Ye have had samples of the confusion
already. \Ve already have a very .
I assorted senate of the United st.it-
There are some Democrats, some K.-pm.
lieans and some ex-llepublicans. an.l ■
has been a gambler s chance whether thev
■ would get together on anything or n ..'
Il has been difficult to guess after a b |
passed the house of representatives ex
• actly what was going to happen to it
when it got into the Senate, and the r- i
call in the several votes has seldc-,
showed the same list of names
"Now. suppose you had a house of re
resentatives mixed like the present sei’.,
ate? I think we could all go fishing t -
the next two years: >.nd if al the same
time you had a leader insistent upon <■<-■
ta.n policies, ’I think the air would I.
full of clamorous voices, but the statute
book would be very empty of fulfilled
promises.
Bitt the most certain impediment to
progress I have not yet spoken of. •ri e
new party does ot even propose to clear
the decks and set the government ft •>
to act. The central proposal of its actual
program is to legalize monopoly. Instead
of defeating, instead of reversing an',
remedying the evil things that hav. i,,-.-.
done under the mistaken leadership of t-.j
regular Republican leaders, it propor. s
that the results of their mistakes shall A
legalized and made regular by being taker,
under the direct supervision of the gov -
ernment of the United State*. Whatever
may be the philanthropic purpose of <■< -
tain parts of its propram, the inevitable
result of that particular proposal will 1...
to confirm by law the partnership be
tween great trusts and the Federal gov
ernment. I do not say that ’this is wlt.it
the leaders of the new party expect or
propose, but merely that that is what will
happen, what must happen under such a
plan.
Only Democratic Party Left.
"Then you have only the Democra’l
party left: and you will ask me how 1
can set up a claim for the Democratic
party. Well, in the first place, it is r.t
era fine discipline to have been on the
outside for sixteen years. You have in
trusted the government of the Uniteil
States to the Democratic party hecacs-.
the Democratic party has been opposed
all these years to the things that the llf
publican leaders were doing Is not tli.ii
a statement of mere fact? Haven't we
been attacking them and opposing thent
all these years, and proposing progt-ao -■
that once looked radical ami now look
reasonable? We haven't just begun being
progressive. We have been progress;-.-
for sixteen years, and we saw the-year
191.2 half a generation before it came.
Are you going to give us no credit for
vision? Do you not think it counts for
something to stay out in the cold on a
conviction for sixteen years?
“The Democratic party is now. perllap-;
for the first time in a generation, unite :
solid arid enthusiastic. And the Demo
, cratic party is the only organized for.-
by which you can set your government
free. I was bred in a football college. I
[ know that what wins is teamwork: and
I want to tell you that we have now g
a Democratic team, schooled in years ot
adversity, that can hold together against
, any team that can be put in the field, and
as compared with which some teams re
cently organized are only scrub teams
19 JACK KNIVESTSIX
SCREWS AND DOLLAR
IN MAN’S STOMACH
UHK'AGO, Sept. 10.—John Mnrtino
is a human ostrich. He became violent
ly ill. and the physician called decid
ed to operate for appendicitis.
Mortimer was chloroformed, an in
cision made into his stomach and lit
. foliovying articles recovered;
One silver dollar.
Six screws.
Nineteen jack knives.
Five knife blades.
Mortimer is 36 years old. He htg.in
swallowing hardware eighteen v . ■
ago to win bets. He will recover.
UNION MEN WILL ERECT
'FRISCO FAIR BUILDINGS
SAN FRANCISCO, Sept. 10 -C. C.
Moore, president of the Panama exi n
sit-on, declares all buildings for th p
fail- will be under construction within
10 months and win be completed by-
June 15. 1914. The contract so- t ••
machinery building will be let Nov-n
--ber 11.
Only American union labor will be
employed, but arrangements have b. -
made with the union leaders so tit. -"
will be no trouble in case foreign la
borers are imported to build sotm ■'
the foreign buildings.
ATLANTA THEATER
TO-NIGHT
THE OLD HOMESTEAD
Tues, and Wed., Mat. Wed.
Nights. 25c to $1: Mat.. 25c to 75c
LVric
GREAT SCENIC REVIVAL OF
BARTLEY CAMPBELL'S ROMANCE.
THE WHITE SLAVE
Complete Scenic Production. Hear the
Famous Jubilee Singers. Seats now on
sale.
Torsyth J
Dally—2<3o. 7:45, 9:15. | - AW , T
Popular Vaudeville \?.„ T
the KEITH KIND. mIOO
Roberts. Hayes 4 Roberts fl GOOD
Three Dolce Sisters. Bo- .
rar.l 4 Nevaro. Goff Ph I- SHOW
<1 lips. Cavanna <t Co. I